The Columbus Dispatch

Thousands protest Netanyahu plan

- Josef Federman

JERUSALEM – Tens of thousands of Israelis protested outside the parliament building in a show of force Monday against Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu as his government formally launched its contentiou­s plan to overhaul the country’s legal system.

The boisterous demonstrat­ion outside the Knesset, coupled with a stormy committee vote inside the building, appeared to deepen the divisions over Netanyahu’s program. The plan has triggered weeks of mass protests, prompted condemnati­ons from wide swaths of Israeli society and drawn a statement of concern from President Joe Biden.

Netanyahu and his allies say the country’s unelected judges have too much power and need to be reined in. His opponents say that Netanyahu, who is being tried on corruption charges, has a deep conflict of interest. They say his planned overhaul will destroy the country’s democratic checks and balances and is a poorly disguised plot to make his criminal case go away.

Monday’s demonstrat­ion was the largest in the city in years. Thousands of people poured into Jerusalem from around the country on jam-packed trains, hoisting flags and chanting “democracy” as they exited the station.

“They hear us,” opposition leader Yair

Lapid told the crowd as he pointed at the parliament. “They hear our strength and our commitment. They pretend they don’t hear. They pretend they’re not afraid. But they hear and they are afraid.”

Organizers claimed that more than 100,000 people joined Monday’s rally. They included Arab, women’s rights and LGBTQ activists as well as opposition parties. They were joined by groups of academics, army reservists, students, high-tech employees, retirees and young families.

As protesters were gathered outside, a parliament­ary committee controlled by a Netanyahu ally passed the first pieces of legislatio­n connected to the plan.

They include a proposal to give the Netanyahu-dominated legislatur­e control over judicial appointmen­ts. Currently, judges are appointed by an independen­t committee that includes lawyers, politician­s and judges.

A second proposal would take away the Supreme Court’s authority to review the legality of major pieces of legislatio­n known as “Basic Laws.”

Still in the works is another proposal to give parliament the power to overturn Supreme Court decisions it does not like. Opponents say the proposal would push Israel toward a system like Hungary and Poland in which the leader wields control over all major levers of power.

Monday’s vote sends the first pieces of legislatio­n to the full parliament.

Netanyahu accused the opposition of “intentiona­lly dragging the country to anarchy,” but also appeared to hold out the possibilit­y of dialogue with his opponents. Late Monday, Netanyahu’s justice minister, Yariv Levin, and Simcha Rothman, the committee chairman, issued a joint statement inviting opposition leaders for a meeting hosted by the president.

But opposition leaders dismissed the offer, saying the legislatio­n must be frozen before dialogue can begin.

 ?? AMIR LEVY/GETTY IMAGES ?? Protesters demonstrat­e in front of the Israeli parliament in Jerusalem as opposition leaders urge a nationwide strike.
AMIR LEVY/GETTY IMAGES Protesters demonstrat­e in front of the Israeli parliament in Jerusalem as opposition leaders urge a nationwide strike.

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